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This July 13, 2010 photo shows the road along the Cabot Trail in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.Glenn Adams / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A Mi’kmaq senator says Cape Breton could follow the lead of a First Nation that transformed itself economically through self-sufficiency, and discuss separating from Nova Scotia.

Sen. Daniel Christmas said the Nova Scotia island is “dying” and he predicts depopulation and high unemployment rates will continue unless drastic action is taken.

Christmas said Cape Breton should start discussing its independence and could borrow from the self-reliant economic model he helped craft for Membertou First Nation two decades ago.

Sen. Daniel Christmas is shown in this undated handout image. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Office of Sen. Daniel Christmas/Sarah Dea

Membertou is just outside Sydney, Cape Breton’s largest community, and has become one of the most prosperous Indigenous communities in the country.

“The question I wanted to ask is, would Cape Breton be better off as the 11th province of Canada, not only for Cape Breton, but also for Nova Scotia and Canada?” Christmas said in a phone interview from Ottawa on Tuesday.

“When I think of Cape Breton as a whole, I think of my own community some 20 years ago. We started relying on ourselves. We wanted to (change) the status quo, and it was dramatic and a lot of hard work … but I’ve been thinking Cape Breton needs to do the same thing.”

Christmas — named to the Senate last fall by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau — first made the proposal last Thursday during the inaugural Father Greg MacLeod lecture at the Membertou Trade and Convention Centre.

Is it time to think about Cape Breton Island, once again, becoming its own political body or its own province within Canada?

Sen. Daniel Christmas

He conceded the proposal is a complex one, and examining it will take some time — but said the purpose of his speech was merely to inspire the discussion.

Christmas cited bleak statistics, including that Cape Breton’s population has declined by nearly 30,000 since 1991. About 132,000 people lived on the island in 2016.

“What I was trying to do was to inspire people to think different,” said Christmas. “Maybe if we took care of ourselves — if we relied on just ourselves — perhaps these numbers can turn around.”

Christmas was instrumental in the development of Membertou, which during the late 1990s was on the brink of bankruptcy and grappling with a 95% unemployment rate.

He and other leaders revamped the First Nation, now a thriving community of roughly 1,400 people with its own schools, daycares, convention centre, market and ice rink.

In 1995, Membertou had 37 employees and a $4-million budget with a $1-million deficit, the band’s website said. Its workforce has grown to about 550 during peak seasons and its operating budget is around $112 million, it said.

In his lecture, Christmas said that while Membertou is succeeding, the rest of the island languishes.

“The hard and fundamentally tragic reality is that Cape Breton is dying,” Christmas said in a written copy of his speech provided to The Canadian Press. “We are slowly bleeding to death.”

Christmas asked: “Is it now time for us to take full political responsibility for ourselves as an island, and take complete charge of our own future? Is it time to think about Cape Breton Island, once again, becoming its own political body or its own province within Canada?”

Cape Breton has been independent in the past, including during the 18th century when it was a British colony.

Christmas said he has received a great deal of reaction since his lecture, with some supporting independence and others dismissing it as unreasonable.

“I guess when you propose something that’s somewhat radical, you can expect a whole range of reactions,” he said.

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